Sentences with phrase «backyard breeders produce»

Back to the shelter issue - backyard breeders produce all these puppies hoping to make a quick buck, and when they find that this is not always the case, the puppies end up at a shelter, if they are lucky.
Throughout the country, thousands of commercial pet - breeding facilities and backyard breeders produce millions of animals for sale in pet stores and through newspaper ads.
Throughout the country, thousands of commercial pet - breeding facilities and backyard breeders produce millions of animals for sale in pet stores and through newspaper ads and internet sites.
They raise awareness of the growing problem of inhumane backyard breeders producing «designer dog» breeds.
Backyard breeders producing dogs for cash under unhealthy, frightening conditions are all over the state.
With this breeds surge in popularity in the early 1970s through the 1980 many puppy mills and backyard breeders produced genetically unhealthy dogs, leading to health issues with the breed.

Not exact matches

Backyard breeders and puppy mills produce as many puppies of these breeds as possible for income.
The problem is not dedicated breeders, but the backyard breeder, who just want their dog to have a litter or produce a litter.
Avoid backyard breeders and puppy mills — they are notorious for producing puppies in an assembly line fashion with no regard for their health and behavior.
Since most people begin their search for a new pet online, It can be difficult to tell the difference between a legitimate rescue organization who happens to have puppies available for adoption and a backyard breeder whose profit from the sale will encourage them to produce more puppies.
Instead, in the eight years after she was stolen as a puppy from the backyard of a home in Memphis, it's believed she was used to produce puppies, by a less than ethical breeder who dumped her once she got too old.
Dog fanciers talk down to «backyard breeders» (breeders that have no vested interest in showing their dog in any venue, but breed to produce pets), holding themselves on a pedestal because they «breed with a purpose».
Every puppy produced by a backyard breeder or puppy mill and placed in a home takes the place of one killed in a shelter because no one adopted it.
Beware of buying puppies produced by puppy mills, «backyard breeders» and breeders offering many breeds.
And every puppy produced by a backyard breeder can make more puppies, and those puppies can make more puppies and so on.
Every puppy produced by a backyard breeder and placed in a home takes the place of one killed in a shelter because no one adopted it.
One of the major differences between an ethical breeder and a backyard breeder is that we care enough to be educated on all aspects of our breed and we take responsibility for what we produce, regardless of the cost.
Many carelessly mixed breeds come from backyard breeders who do not consider the genetic mix of what they are producing or what impact it will have on health.
The result was far fewer registered Dals but the drop didn't necessarily reflect the number of spotted dogs produced by backyard breeders and commercial kennels because many of those dogs are never registered.
The definition of «backyard breeder» (BYB) will vary slightly depending upon who you ask, but generally speaking the term is used to describe a person who casually breeds dogs in the home, probably mating the untested, untitled family pet (s) to recoup the cost of purchase or dog care, to provide pets for their friends and family, and / or to produce another dog «just like Fluffy».
Backyard breeders are not particularly knowledgeable about their breed, dogs in general, genetics or the breeding proceedure, and the puppies they produce are low quality, possibly sick or tempermentally unsound.
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